The Tampa Bay Buccaneers released their inactives for their Week 10 matchup against the Washington Redskins.

The Bucs are going to be without some key contributors on both sides of the ball. Most notably defensive end Vinny Curry, who has been dealing with an ankle injury for a few weeks

Curry has started at defensive end opposite Jason Pierre-Paul for the entire season. Tampa Bay will be without one of their best pass rushers against a banged-up Washington offensive line.

Second-round picks Ronald Jones, and M.J. Stewart will also be out of action on Sunday. Jones didn’t log a practice all week and will have to miss this week’s game. Jones has taken small steps after a rough preseason, but injuries have halted his progress.

Stewart has had multiple, “Welcome to the NFL” moments in his rookie season, but has gotten a tremendous amount of playing time. His struggles are well-documented, but rarely do rookie slot corners get the workload that he has received.

Tampa will also be without backup interior lineman Evan Smith. Smith is both the backup right guard and center, so the Bucs will be extremely limited at those positions. Smith typically rotates in at right guard with Caleb Benenoch, but Tampa Bay won’t have that luxury today.

Washington is dealing with a number of injuries to the offensive line. A much-needed break for the Buccaneers defense that hasn’t been able to stop a nosebleed this season. Hopefully, Pierre-Paul and company can take advantage.

Eagles vs Cowboys : The Dallas Cowboys (3-5) are on the road this week to face the Philadelphia Eagles (4-4) and both teams need a win to keep pace with the Washington Redskins in the NFC East. The Cowboys are 2-2 against the Eagles over the last two seasons, with each taking a win the last week of the season when both teams were resting players after securing home field advantage in the NFC.

Both teams will be missing starters, but the Dallas Cowboys are certainly ailing a bit more, especially on the defensive side of the football.

Tavon Austin will be out again this week and the Cowboys made some moves on the wide receiver depth chart this week to try to continue to find a spark with the offense. They brought Noah Brown back from injured reserve and placed him on the active roster. Wide Receiver Lance Lenoir was also promoted from the practice squad. Deonte Thompson was released to make room for the corresponding moves.

The Cowboys are going to be without two starters on the defense with David Irving and Sean Lee sitting out this week. Lee is not a surprise after pulling up in the loss last week to the Tennessee Titans. Taco Charlton, though not a starter, will be out this week after suffering a shoulder injury last week as well. The injuries to the defense will lead to more opportunities to for Maliek Collins, Leighton Vander Esch, and Dorance Armstrong. Randy Gregory looks to be ready to go after getting in limited practices each day this week.

Tight End Geoff Swaim is expected to return after making a limited appearance at Cowboys practice on Friday. He’s needed. With Scott Linehan addicted to using a tight end, Geoff Swaim is necessary to the lineup. Blake Jarwin and Rico Gathers are not good enough to run with the first team offense.

The big news on the Philadelphia Eagles injury report is that the Cowboys will be facing their NFC East rival without two of their starting corner backs. Sidney Jones has primarily been playing in the slot for the Eagles and Jalen Mills has played outside.

The Cowboys have struggled this season on offense, but if they’re able to control the Eagles front four, especially Defensive Tackle Fletcher Cox, they’ll have a chance to make some plays against Philadelphia’s secondary.

Some underrated news is that while Running Back Darren Sproles returned to practice this week on a limited basis this week, he isn’t quite ready to make his return. Even at his advanced age, Sproles is still a dynamic player that can hurt a defense.

The Dallas Cowboys and the Philadelphia Eagles both need a victory on Sunday Night Football and both are struggling with injuries to key players. Whichever team is able to overcome or limit the impact of these injuries will be a key factor in the game.

Seahawks vs Rams : After suffering their first loss of the 2018 season last week, Todd Gurley and the Los Angeles Rams (8-1) look to rebound when they host Russell Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks (4-4) in a clash of NFC West teams at The L.A. Coliseum as Week 10 action continues on Sunday.

The game is scheduled to start at 4:25 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on Fox in select areas (coverage map here). If the game is on in your market and you don’t have cable or can’t get to a TV, you can still watch a live stream of the game (or DVR it) on your computer, phone or streaming device by signing up for one of the following cable-free, live-TV streaming services:

Fox (live in all 32 NFL markets) is included in FuboTV’s main package, which includes 85 total channels and is largely tailored towards sports fans. You can sign up for a free 7-day trial right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the FuboTV website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the FuboTV app.

If you can’t watch live, FuboTV comes with 30 hours of Cloud DVR (with the ability to upgrade to 500 hours), as well as a handy “72-Hour Lookback” feature, which will allow you to watch the game on-demand up to three days after it airs even if you forgot to record it.

In addition to their extensive Netflix-like streaming library, Hulu now also offers a bundle of 50-plus live TV channels, including Fox (live in all 32 NFL markets). You can sign up for “Hulu with Live TV” right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Hulu website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the Hulu app.

If you can’t watch live, “Hulu with Live TV” also comes with 50 hours of Cloud DVR storage (with the ability to upgrade to “Enhanced Cloud DVR,” which gives you 200 hours of DVR space and the ability to fast forward through commercials).

Fox (live in 17 NFL markets) is included in the “Sling Blue” channel package. You can sign up for a free 7-day trial, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Sling TV website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the Sling TV app.

If you can’t watch live, you can get 50 hours of cloud DVR storage as an additional add-on.

Additionally, you can watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Fox Sports Go website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the Fox Sports Go app. You’ll need to log in to a cable provider to watch this way, but if you don’t have that, you can still sign up for one of the above options and then use your FuboTV, Hulu or Sling TV credentials to sign in and watch on the Fox digital platforms.

Streaming of in-market and prime-time games can be watched on phones via the NFL Mobile app.

SundayTicket.TV allows you to watch a live stream of games that are out of your market and aren’t nationally televised. The service is available for people who live in residences that can’t get satellite (apartments, condos, etc.), as well as residents of San Francisco, Philadelphia and New York City. You can check here to see if you’re eligible.

Additionally, most college students may watch out-of-market games via SundayTicket U.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Sunday Ticket website, or you can watch on your phone, tablet or other streaming device via the NFL Sunday Ticket app, which is free to download on many different devices.

If you’re fine watching games on-demand, another option is NFL Game Pass Domestic, which allows you to watch replays of every NFL game for a fee of $99.99 for the season. No live games are available under this service, but you’ll be able to watch them following the conclusion of games for the day.

Once signed up, you can watch games on-demand on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

If you’re not in the United States, surrounding territories, or Mexico, you can watch NFL games live via NFL Game Pass International. The cost of the package depends on which country you’re in.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your phone, tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

The Rams fell to the New Orleans Saints last week 45-35, a game where they went down 17 points in the first half. After attempting a ferocious comeback, eventually tying the game at 35-35, Drew Brees and Michael Thomas connected on a 75-yard touchdown pass and New Orleans eventually pulled away at the very end.

The last time Los Angeles played Seattle on October 7, a narrow 33-31 victory at CenturyLink Field. The Rams lost wide receivers Brandin Cooks and Cooker Kupp at separate points in that game because of concussions. Both have since returned, Kupp also working his way back from a knee injury, and both will be healthy entering Sunday.

Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll understands the ridiculously imposing task his secondary has, attempting to slow down the Rams offense in a prime bounce-back spot.

“We have to work with the under coverage better than we did last (time). We gave up some stuff that they dumped off and made a lot of yards after the catch. A couple of those were tackles, but just deployment and stuff.”

Seattle’s offense will need to carry the team. Running back Chris Carson, with three 100-plus yard performances over the last five games, is a game-time decision with a hip injury. Wide receiver Doug Baldwin (groin) is set to play Sunday against the Rams.

Packers vs Dolphins : Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers (3-4-1) are coming off consecutive crushing road defeats at the hands of the Los Angeles Rams and New England Patriots. Rodgers and the Packers disappointingly return home when they prepare to play the Miami Dolphins (5-4) at Lambeau Field as Week 9 action continues on Sunday afternoon.

The game is scheduled to start at 4:25 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on CBS in select areas (coverage map here). If the game is on in your market and you don’t have cable or can’t get to a TV, you can still watch a live stream of the game (or DVR it) on your computer, phone or streaming device by signing up for one of the following cable-free, live-TV streaming services:

If you have Amazon Prime or start a free 30-day trial of Amazon Prime, you can watch all CBS content (both live and on-demand) via the CBS Amazon Channel, which also comes with a 7-day free trial.

Once you’re signed up for both Amazon Prime and the CBS channel, you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Amazon website, or you can watch on your tablet or streaming device via the Amazon Video app.

CBS (live in 28 NFL markets) is included in FuboTV’s main package, which includes 85 total channels and is largely tailored towards sports fans. You can sign up for a free 7-day trial right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the FuboTV website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the FuboTV app.

If you can’t watch live, FuboTV comes with 30 hours of Cloud DVR (with the ability to upgrade to 500 hours), as well as a handy “72-Hour Lookback” feature, which will allow you to watch the game on-demand up to three days after it airs even if you forgot to record it.

In addition to their extensive Netflix-like streaming library, Hulu now also offers a bundle of 50-plus live TV channels, including CBS (live in 29 NFL markets). You can sign up for “Hulu with Live TV” right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Hulu website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the Hulu app.

If you can’t watch live, “Hulu with Live TV” also comes with 50 hours of Cloud DVR storage (with the ability to upgrade to “Enhanced Cloud DVR,” which gives you 200 hours of DVR space and the ability to fast forward through commercials).

Streaming of in-market and prime-time games can be watched on phones via the NFL Mobile app.

SundayTicket.TV allows you to watch a live stream of games that are out of your market and aren’t nationally televised. The service is available for people who live in residences that can’t get satellite (apartments, condos, etc.), as well as residents of San Francisco, Philadelphia and New York City. You can check here to see if you’re eligible.

Additionally, most college students may watch out-of-market games via SundayTicket U.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Sunday Ticket website, or you can watch on your phone, tablet or other streaming device via the NFL Sunday Ticket app, which is free to download on many different devices.

If you’re fine watching games on-demand, another option is NFL Game Pass Domestic, which allows you to watch replays of every NFL game for a fee of $99.99 for the season. No live games are available under this service, but you’ll be able to watch them following the conclusion of games for the day.

Once signed up, you can watch games on-demand on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

If you’re not in the United States, surrounding territories, or Mexico, you can watch NFL games live via NFL Game Pass International. The cost of the package depends on which country you’re in.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your phone, tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

For two straight weeks, the Packers have suffered miserable, potentially avoidable losses. Two weeks ago on the road against the Rams, Ty Montgomery, who was traded to the Baltimore Ravens before this year’s trade deadline, fumbled a kickoff late. Last week, running back Aaron Jones fumbled in the fourth quarter; the Patriots scored 14 unanswered points, defeating the Packers 31-17.

Green Bay’s starting quarterback, who outplayed Tom Brady for most of the game, acknowledges his team needs to fix the errors.

Wide receiver Randall Cobb (hamstring) us questionable, while tight end Jimmy Graham (knee) was limited in practice all week. It has been a rough few weeks for Green Bay.

Miami won an ugly 13-6 game at home last week against the New York Jets. The Dolphins failed to score on offense, as their only score was on a pick-six by Jerome Baker in the fourth quarter.

So long as Ryan Tannehill remains out, Adam Gase’s offense will be limited. Tannehill is reportedly targeting a Week 12 return from a shoulder injury that has kept him out for about a month already.

Patriots vs Titans : There are a lot of connection between the New England Patriots and the Tennessee Titans but none comes with as much intrigue as the one with cornerback Malcolm Butler. The story is well known: an undrafted rookie, Butler became an instant star when he made the game-winning interception in Super Bowl 49. However, his tenure in New England ended in controversial fashion, with him getting benched for Super Bowl 51.

Butler left the Patriots after the title game and now is a starting cornerback in Tennessee. However, his performance has not been up to the same standards he set over his three years (minus one game) as a starter in New England: the 28-year old gave up 39 catches so far this season for 618 yards and seven touchdowns. “I shudder to think about what Josh Gordon will do to him,” Jimmy Morris said about Butler.

Leading up to today’s game with spoke with Jimmy, who is covering the Titans as editor-in-chief for our sister site Music City Miracles, about the matchup between the Patriots offense and Tennessee’s defense — and safe to say that Butler has been a weak link for a unit that has its undeniable strengths but has struggled when it comes to defending chunk plays this season: “Their biggest weakness, without question, has been big plays.”

“Malcolm Butler has been the biggest victim,” Jimmy said about the embattled former Patriot who signed a five-year, $61.3 million contract with $30 million in guarantees this offseason. “We are all terrified that Bill Belichick is going to go after Butler early and often in this game to prove why Butler wasn’t on the field in the Super Bowl. He has been burnt by guys like Jordan Matthewsand Allen Hurns already this year.”

But while Butler and the Titans have had some issues when it comes to preventing big plays this season, the team still has a very good defense in other aspects. “They have been really good in the red zone,” Jimmy said about the NFL’s number one scoring defense — one that leads the league with just 16.8 points given up per game. “[The red zone defense] has been the biggest thing that has them atop the scoring rankings.”

As already mentioned in this week’s advanced stats breakdown, red zone performance might be the key to the game for the Patriots. “They have given up yards, but they have really #Titanup’d (pun intended) when teams get inside the 20 yard line,” Jimmy noted. “I am interested to see if they can keep that up. It’s pretty easy to be good in the red zone against guys like Blake Bortles. It is a whole different story when facing Tom Brady.”

In order for the Titans to stop Brady and company, a former Patriot defender will need to bring his A-game today: cornerback Logan Ryan. While not the same household name as Butler, Ryan is in the middle of a solid second season in Tennessee. “He isn’t an elite cornerback, but he has been a very consistent performer week in and week out for this defense,” Jimmy noted about the former Patriots third-round pick.

“He was mainly playing as the nickel corner early in the year, but he plays outside in the base defense now because Butler has been so terrible,” he continued. Ryan and Butler are not the only defensive backs to watch today, though. “[A] guy you need to know about is All-Pro safety Kevin Byard,” Jimmy said. “He has been in this news this week after his interception and celebration on the star in Dallas Monday night. He has a lot of range on the backend of this Titans defense.”

The Titans’ star players do not all line up in the secondary, however: the front seven also features some serious talent — led by standout Jurrell Casey. “Casey is the guy that creates the pressure up front,” Jimmy said about the defensive tackle. “He would be a perennial All-Pro if he played for the Patriots, but he doesn’t get the recognition he deserves because he has spent his career with the Titans playing on mainly bad teams.”

“You can believe that Belichick and Josh McDaniels have spent a lot of time this week talking about him,” Jimmy continued. Another player he pointed out is ex-Boston College standout Harold Landry, who was drafted by the Titans in the second round this year and plays as an outside linebacker for the team. “Landry has shown some flashes of being really special with his elite speed and bend off the edge.”

“Having a guy like Landry out there has opened things up for Casey on the inside because teams have to plan for him coming around the edge,” Jimmy pointed out. “Landry will get better as he gets more experience at the NFL level.” And while the rookie will face a big challenge going against the Patriots’ high-quality offensive tackles Trent Brown and Marcus Cannon, Casey might pose a different challenge.

After all, New England will be without starting right guard Shaq Mason today. And while replacement Ted Karras is a solid player, seeing him go up against Casey is a mismatch in the Titans’ favor. Ultimately, the talented defensive tackle and his colleagues in the front seven will try their best to cover any potential shortcomings Butler and the Tennessee secondary might have against New England’s receiving groups.

Both the New York Jets (3-6) and Buffalo Bills (2-6) are banged up heading into Week 10. Head coaches Todd Bowles and Sean McDermott will have to coach and fight through with key injuries to young players this Sunday at the Meadowlands.

The game is scheduled to start at XX p.m. ET and will be broadcast on CBS in select areas (coverage map here). If the game is on in your market and you don’t have cable or can’t get to a TV, you can still watch a live stream of the game (or DVR it) on your computer, phone or streaming device by signing up for one of the following cable-free, live-TV streaming services:

If you have Amazon Prime or start a free 30-day trial of Amazon Prime, you can watch all CBS content (both live and on-demand) via the CBS Amazon Channel, which also comes with a 7-day free trial.

Once you’re signed up for both Amazon Prime and the CBS channel, you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Amazon website, or you can watch on your tablet or streaming device via the Amazon Video app.

This service is available live in all 32 NFL markets.

CBS (live in 28 NFL markets) is included in FuboTV’s main package, which includes 85 total channels and is largely tailored towards sports fans. You can sign up for a free 7-day trial right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the FuboTV website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the FuboTV app.

If you can’t watch live, FuboTV comes with 30 hours of Cloud DVR (with the ability to upgrade to 500 hours), as well as a handy “72-Hour Lookback” feature, which will allow you to watch the game on-demand up to three days after it airs even if you forgot to record it.

In addition to their extensive Netflix-like streaming library, Hulu now also offers a bundle of 50-plus live TV channels, including CBS (live in 29 NFL markets). You can sign up for “Hulu with Live TV” right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Hulu website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the Hulu app.

If you can’t watch live, “Hulu with Live TV” also comes with 50 hours of Cloud DVR storage (with the ability to upgrade to “Enhanced Cloud DVR,” which gives you 200 hours of DVR space and the ability to fast forward through commercials).

Streaming of in-market and prime-time games can be watched on phones via the NFL Mobile app.

SundayTicket.TV allows you to watch a live stream of games that are out of your market and aren’t nationally televised. The service is available for people who live in residences that can’t get satellite (apartments, condos, etc.), as well as residents of San Francisco, Philadelphia and New York City. You can check here to see if you’re eligible.

Additionally, most college students may watch out-of-market games via SundayTicket U.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Sunday Ticket website, or you can watch on your phone, tablet or other streaming device via the NFL Sunday Ticket app, which is free to download on many different devices.

If you’re fine watching games on-demand, another option is NFL Game Pass Domestic, which allows you to watch replays of every NFL game for a fee of $99.99 for the season. No live games are available under this service, but you’ll be able to watch them following the conclusion of games for the day.

Once signed up, you can watch games on-demand on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

If you’re not in the United States, surrounding territories, or Mexico, you can watch NFL games live via NFL Game Pass International. The cost of the package depends on which country you’re in.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your phone, tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

The worst news was confirmed this week for the Jets, as they will be without rookie quarterback Sam Darnold against the Bills. Darnold is nursing a foot sprain, and was seen in a walking boot during practice this week as veteran Josh McCown prepares to re-enter the starting mix in fill-in duty.

On the Bills side, Nathan Peterman… is finally not starting. Derek Anderson was signed to be the starter, and then he got hurt. Now, it is Matt Barkley’s turn to ride the memorable Bills’ 2018 quarterback carousel. Barkley, who has been on the roster for not even two weeks, will not have much to work with. LeSean McCoy has largely been ineffective this season due to a putrid offensive line.

While Sean McDermott’s job in Buffalo is safe largely due to the front office moving on from Tyros Taylor and beginning a retool this past offseason, Todd Bowles’ in New York is largely in question. As early as this year’s Thursday night game in Cleveland — a game Baker Mayfield made his NFL debut and eventually led the Browns to their first regular-season win in almost two years — the New York media has thrown out Bowles’ name as a potential candidate who could lose his position.

The loser of this game will officially fall to last place in the AFC East. For the Jets,

Bengals vs Saints : The Cincinnati Bengals will be the latest opponent trying to slow down Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints offense on Sunday. Based on the way the Saints are playing, the Bengals will need to execute a near perfect game plan to succeed.

The Cincinnati New Orleans game starts at 1 pm EST / 10 am PST and will be televised on Fox TV. Watch Saints vs Bengals live streaming online without cable using a service detailed below:

Our recommended way to watch the Bengals vs Saints football game online free without cable by trying out the FuboTV 7-day free trial. Fubo TV includes Fox and many other sports channels, also offers three days of auto recording via its 72-Hour Lookback feature, and 50 hours of Cloud DVR service as an added bonus.

Another way to watch the Saints vs Bengals game live stream without cable is with Hulu with Live TV where Fox, Fox Sports 1 and other popular channel feeds are found, with some exceptions depending on exactly where you live. Hulu Live TV also offers cloud DVR recording and a host of other popular channels.

Cable and satellite subscribers can watch the Saints live stream at Fox Sports Go by logging in with their provider credentials.

New Orleans (7-1) has been aging like a fine wine this season. After dropping their season opener, they’ve run off seven straight wins including handing the Rams their first defeat last season.

Brees briefly had a new target when Dez Bryant was signed last week. Unfortunately Bryant tore his Achilles during practice and obviously won’t be available to play.

The Bengals (5-3) are down a receiver as well. A.J. Green, Andy Dalton’s favorite target, is down with an injury. Look for Dalton to try and spread the ball around.

Cincinnati enter’s this game with the worst ranked passing defense in the NFL. Brees and the Saints offense could put up 50+ points as a result if they take shots down the field.

Jaguars vs Colts : The Jacksonville Jaguars (3-5) and Indianapolis Colts (3-5) are both AFC South teams tied for last place. The main difference between the two teams is that each are headed in two totally opposite directions.

The game is scheduled to start at 1 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on CBS in select areas (coverage map here). If the game is on in your market and you don’t have cable or can’t get to a TV, you can still watch a live stream of the game (or DVR it) on your computer, phone or streaming device by signing up for one of the following cable-free, live-TV streaming services:

If you have Amazon Prime or start a free 30-day trial of Amazon Prime, you can watch all CBS content (both live and on-demand) via the CBS Amazon Channel, which also comes with a 7-day free trial.

Once you’re signed up for both Amazon Prime and the CBS channel, you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Amazon website, or you can watch on your tablet or streaming device via the Amazon Video app.

CBS (live in 28 NFL markets) is included in FuboTV’s main package, which includes 85 total channels and is largely tailored towards sports fans. You can sign up for a free 7-day trial right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the FuboTV website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the FuboTV app.

If you can’t watch live, FuboTV comes with 30 hours of Cloud DVR (with the ability to upgrade to 500 hours), as well as a handy “72-Hour Lookback” feature, which will allow you to watch the game on-demand up to three days after it airs even if you forgot to record it.

In addition to their extensive Netflix-like streaming library, Hulu now also offers a bundle of 50-plus live TV channels, including CBS (live in 29 NFL markets). You can sign up for “Hulu with Live TV” right here, and you can then watch a live stream of the game on your computer via the Hulu website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the Hulu app.

If you can’t watch live, “Hulu with Live TV” also comes with 50 hours of Cloud DVR storage (with the ability to upgrade to “Enhanced Cloud DVR,” which gives you 200 hours of DVR space and the ability to fast forward through commercials).

Streaming of in-market and prime-time games can be watched on phones via the NFL Mobile app.

SundayTicket.TV allows you to watch a live stream of games that are out of your market and aren’t nationally televised. The service is available for people who live in residences that can’t get satellite (apartments, condos, etc.), as well as residents of San Francisco, Philadelphia and New York City. You can check here to see if you’re eligible.

Additionally, most college students may watch out-of-market games via SundayTicket U.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Sunday Ticket website, or you can watch on your phone, tablet or other streaming device via the NFL Sunday Ticket app, which is free to download on many different devices.

If you’re fine watching games on-demand, another option is NFL Game Pass Domestic, which allows you to watch replays of every NFL game for a fee of $99.99 for the season. No live games are available under this service, but you’ll be able to watch them following the conclusion of games for the day.

Once signed up, you can watch games on-demand on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

If you’re not in the United States, surrounding territories, or Mexico, you can watch NFL games live via NFL Game Pass International. The cost of the package depends on which country you’re in.

Once signed up, you can watch games on your computer via the NFL Game Pass website, or on your phone, tablet or streaming device via the NFL Mobile app, which can be downloaded for free on a handful of different devices.

After a 3-1 start, once that had the Jaguars sitting atop the AFC South, they have since lost four games in a row, as the locker room has reportedly starting going into a tailspin. One issue: quarterback. Blake Bortles overachieved in the postseason in January, and although he had a few good games toward the beginning of this season, he has been atrocious over the last four games. Having no decent receivers.

Bortles remains optimistic, but understands Jacksonville will likely have to pile up wins early in the second-half of the season in order to get back to where they were last year around this time.

“I think they are all must-wins for me from here on out. I think we have to win them all. Maybe you get lucky and lose a couple and find a way to still make it, but I think you have to win them all and for sure starting with the first one.”

After starting 1-5 with some aggravating last-second losses, the Colts are finally starting to turn the corner. Two consecutive wins, though against the lowly Buffalo Bills and Oakland Raiders, has Indianapolis elevating itself from the bottom of the pack and remaining positive.

Andrew Luck hasn’t been sacked since the Thursday Night Football loss to the New England Patriots. That is in large part due to the offensive line, including Anthony Castonzo, center Ryan Kelly, and 2018 No. 6 overall pick Reggie Nelson. General manager Chris Ballard has made up for prior transgressions, and done something previous GM Ryan Grigson failed to do for years, keep Luck upright and out of trouble.

In addition, a healthy Marlon Mack and T.Y. Hilton help. The Jaguars got some good news this week, as running back Leonard Fournette (hamstring) was finally cleared from the injury report and is expected to return Sunday.

The Minnesota Vikings and Green Bay Packers were considered before the season to be among the inner-circle contenders in the NFC, while the Bears were viewed as a potential fringe playoff team due to the expected offensive improvement baked in by replacing John Fox with Matt Nagy.

Things have worked out well for Chicago on both offense and defense, while both the Vikings and Packers have been up and down. Now, the Bears are right in the mix for the division title. They can go a long way toward solidifying their chances by handling Sunday’s matchup with the last-place Lions, who are 3-5 and recently traded one of their best offensive players.

Will the Bears step up and ensure their footing, or can the Lions pull off the upset? We’ll find out Sunday (1 p.m., Fox, stream on fuboTV). Here’s what to watch out for.

Let’s talk about that aforementioned improvement in the Bears’ offense. Chicago hasn’t exactly been the most consistent team on a game-to-game or even play-to-play basis, but the overall difference between this season and last is stark. Take a look at the following chart, which shows where the Bears ranked in a variety of offensive categories last season and where they rank this season. The better mark is highlighted in bold.

Yeah. It’s safe to say that Nagy and company have found some stuff that worked. Some of the improvement is due to the signings of Allen Robinson, Trey Burton, and Taylor Gabriel, plus the drafting of Anthony Miller, but Nagy has found a far more effective way to use running back Tarik Cohen and has schemed Mitchell Trubiskyinto easier throws this season than he had a year ago. Chicago’s top pass-catchers averaged 2.71 yards of separation last year, per an analysis of NFL.com’s NextGen Stats, but this year their separation average is up to 3.01 yards. While a difference of 0.3 yards might not seem like a ton, consider the fact that it means there is an entire extra foot of space in which to fire the ball. That’s a world of difference, and it’s been clear in the ease with which Trubisky has completed passes this year (64.2 percent) compared to last (59.4 percent).

That extra separation has borne itself out elsewhere in Trubisky’s numbers. His throws are going for first downs (32.9 percent to 27.9 percent) and touchdowns (5.8 percent to 1.9 percent) far more often this year. He’s also created a ton more big plays. Just 23 of Trubisky’s 330 pass attempts a year ago created gains of 20 yards or more. He’s already got 26 such plays this year, on 70 fewer pass attempts. That’s a jump from 6.0 percent to 10.0 percent. The guys creating most of those big plays this year are Cohen and Gabriel, who have combined to account for 12 of 26 20-plus-yard catches on the year.

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The Lions rank 26th in DVOA on deep passes this season, indicating that Gabriel has a chance to break a big play on Sunday. (That’s especially true because Darius Slay — who has not practiced all week and is uncertain to play — is likely to shadow Allen Robinson if he suits up, leaving Gabriel working against a weaker cover corner for most of the afternoon. ) The Lions’ pass defense has been poor in just about every area this season, with slot wideouts, tight ends, and running backs also finding success. With Slay likely covering Robinson, Trubisky and company would be wise to look at Gabriel, Miller, Cohen, and Burton as often as possible.

The Bears are also likely to find a good amount of success in the run game. Detroit’s run defense was arguably the worst in the NFL before they traded for Damon Harrison at the deadline, and in the two games since he landed in Detroit, they’ve allowed 178 yards on the ground to the Seahawks and 128 to the Vikings. And that’s with Harrison playing more than 60 percent of the snaps in both games. Chicago’s Jordan Howard-led run game had been on a roll until it ran into the Bills last week, but that game was over pretty much before it started and the offense barely had to do anything at all. The Bears had averaged 158.7 rush yards per game over the previous three weeks, and between Howard gashing up the middle, Cohen scooting around the edge, and the ever-present thread of Trubisky taking off with the ball himself on a scramble or read-option, they should have success running on the Lions as well.

Detroit’s offense unsurprisingly struggled in the first game of the post-Golden Tate era last week, with the Vikings holding the Lions to just 209 total yards, 18 first downs, and nine points. All three of those figures checked in well below Detroit’s season averages of 373.3 yards, 21.6 first downs, and 24.4 points per game prior to the contest.

The Lions essentially replaced Tate in their offense with scat-back Theo Riddick, who had been out for a few weeks until returning, and while Riddick did catch seven passes, they totaled just 36 yards. (T.J. Jones took most of the slot snaps but he was pretty much a non-factor.) Riddick is a strong pass-catching option out of the backfield but he doesn’t provide nearly the kind of downfield threat Tate does, nor is he nearly as good a run-after-catch guy as Tate, who has long been one of the best players in the league at creating additional yardage.

One way to make up for Tate’s absence would be for the Lions to figure out a way to get Kenny Golladay going again. Golladay got off to a scorching start to the season with 27 catches for 428 yards and three scores in the first five games, reaching at least 74 yards or a touchdown in each of those games. Over the past three games, he has six catches for 95 yards on just seven targets. I mean … what???

The Bears play sides with cornerbacks Prince Amukamara and Kyle Fuller, with Amukamara taking 99 percent of his snaps on the right side of the field and Fuller playing 100 percent on the left. That means Golladay will see a decent amount of both, as he tends to move around the formation. Neither is necessarily the easiest guy to get going against. Among the 110 players who have been targeted in coverage at least 25 times, per Sports Info Solutions, Fuller ranks 13th in opponent passer rating and Amukamara ranks 54th.

Detroit’s offensive line had been very good in pass protection this season until completely falling apart last week. Matthew Stafford was sacked 10 (TEN!!) times by the Vikings a week ago, and he barely had time to look downfield, let alone throw the ball. The Bears have 24 sacks on the season, but recorded just three combined against the Jets and Bills with Khalil Mack on the sideline the past two weeks. The reasonable expectation is that Mack returns this week, and that is very bad news for the Lions. When fully healthy he has been absolutely unstoppable this season, and after taking two weeks off to let his ankle heal, he should be raring to go in this one. If the Lions can’t keep Mack away from Stafford, they’re done.

The Detroit run game has been better since they essentially handed the reins to rookie Kerryon Johnson, but the Bears are one of the toughest teams in the NFL to run against. Johnson also has just 59 yards on 20 carries in his past two games. If the line struggles to create holes through which he can run, well, again, they’re done.

Browns vs Falcons : The Browns are an improved team and a fun one to watch at that. Baker Mayfield looks like a legitimate NFL QB and Nick Chubb is a superstar in the making. On the other side, Myles Garrettterrifies me and in general, that roster is full of young talent with tremendous upside.

However, their aggressive style of defense does not work well against a smart, veteran QB like Matt Ryan. I suspect he and Sark already have a plan in place to punish their defense for aggression. I think this is a team on the rise, but they’re not there just yet.

The Falcons have all the momentum and I’m not willing to bet against Steve Sarkisian’s ability to continue to impersonate a competent offensive coordinator.

Talent-wise, the Browns are a competitive football team. But the coaching is simply not there for Cleveland, and it’s weighing down a decent roster. The Falcons are peaking and just wasted one of the NFC’s top defenses on the road. We’ll see what Bruce Irvin’s addition does for Atlanta’s defense, but this is a game that the Falcons should control from start to finish. If Atlanta can get out to a sizable lead early, it’ll force Cleveland to play catch-up–which will likely result in some turnovers for the improving but still young Baker Mayfield.

As fun as last week was and as exciting as the future may be with Bruce Irvin here and Deion Jones close to returning, part of me still thinks Atlanta might be a bit more roller-coaster-ish in the back eight games. While Washington was a bit banged up on offense last week, this Falcons defense will get no such break with Cleveland looking to be pretty healthy. Now, they’re a lesser team than what Atlanta faced in D.C., but they’re far from an easy opponent. If the offensive line can handle Myles Garrett and company, the team will be able to score its points. I worry the defense might regress just a hair, but they should be able to do enough to keep this one from getting too close. I expect a late Cleveland score to make this one look closer on paper, but Atlanta should hypothetically have a 31-17 type of afternoon if all goes well.

Last week I predicted a narrow win and the Falcons beat the pants off Washington. This week, I’m predicting a narrow win and hopefully the Falcons will do that well or better.

Their matchup this week has some complications—Cleveland has a quality pass rush, forces a lot of turnovers, and the weather’s going to be colder than Atlanta is used to—but the Falcons are the better team and are hot right now. It should translate to a win on the road, and we’ll hope it’s a comfortable one for the sake of our collective blood pressure.

At 1-4, I eyed this matchup as a game where we could see the Falcons get punched in the mouth by an improving team talent-wise. Make no mistake, this is not your normal Browns team. Mayfield will win in Cleveland, Jarvis Landry is a workhorse at receiver, Myles Garrett is in the elite tier among pass rushers, and Denzel Ward could be a top-5 corner when he’s fully developed. The run game here will speak volumes. Cleveland averages about 124 yards per game on the ground which places them in the top-10. They also allow roughly 138 per game which places them among the league’s worst. A fast start by the Falcons offense forces the Browns into shootout mode, which they don’t have the ammo to trade shots. A suddenly faster Falcons defensive line gets to Mayfield and a few turnovers late makes this one-sided.

As dysfunctional as they are as an organization, the Browns’ roster is filled with talent on both sides of the ball. They have managed to draft a plethora of highly regarded prospects that have immediately acclimated to the NFL. Baker Mayfield, Nick Chubb, David Njoku, Myles Garrett, Larry Ogunjobi, and Denzel Ward are either future stars or soon-to-be established stars. This isn’t going to be a total one-sided affair. Although the Falcons’ offense is firing on all cylinders, it may take some time to adjust to Gregg Williams’ absurd blitzes. An undisciplined, poor tackling team like Cleveland will eventually falter against one of the most prolific offenses in the league. Expect Matt Ryan and his terrific supporting cast to keep rolling.